Posts Tagged ‘National’

American Free Press Newspaper

Monday, March 8th, 2010

 

ACTIVISTS CALL FOR ‘NATIONAL STRIKE’

More_news3

Greek Economy Is In Shambles— Is America Next?
China Snubs Israeli Calls for Iran Sanctions
Ex-Senator Wants to Cut Social Security
Traficant Town Hall Rocks D.C.
Tea Parties Sabotaged
Struggling Towns Begin Printing Their Own Cash
Rand Paul Offers Hope For The Future
People Have Power to Beat ‘Money Trust’
CIA Checkmated in Afghanistan
5_dollar_afp
Secret War Being Waged Between Obama, Neo-Cons
Big Oil Behind Haiti Quake?
Legendary Populist Historian Eustace Mullins Dies
Third Party’s Platform Must Include Repeal of 16th Amendment
America Needs Tariffs
Texas Nationalists Say ‘Sovereignty or Secession’
Home Schooled Star Quarterback An All-American off the Field Too
Mike_piper_graphic3
Traficant Lashes Out at Power of Israel
All-New Evidence Discovered Proving
Jim Traficant Was Victim of Frame-Up

Mainstream Media Didn’t Tell You Bob Novak Opposed Israeli Power
Rothschild Agents Take 10 Key Posts
In Administration of Rookie President

VIDEO: Mike Piper on Zionist Media

International CurrencyBetterThanGold120x600












03_04_10_stackirsbuilding

Reporter Victor Thorn has documented the holes in the official story about Joe Stack flying his plane into the IRS building in Austin. Click here to read his column.

Hot news links

Pat Buchanan: Pitching for America
Don’t Blame Bunning for Debt
Legislators Go After NAFTA
Raise Taxes, Cut Spending? Why Not End Bailouts?
Attack on Pentagon Motivated by Anger Toward US, Suspicion of 9/11
Southern Poverty Law Center Terrorizing Patriots
Bill Black: 10 Ways to Crack Down on Financial Crimes
Corporate Crime Breakdown
Bank Lobbyist Becomes Chief Regulator
Asteroid Killed Dinosaurs?
Greek Protesters Storm Parliament After Budget Cuts

One in Three Killed in Pakistan by US Drones Were Civilians

American Free Press Newspaper

GlobalResearch.ca

Monday, March 8th, 2010

 

March 13: Civil Resistance to War and Empire in Nation’s Capital

Peace of the Action’s "Camp OUT NOW", Washington, DC

- 2010-03-20


VIDEO: Let the States Provide Single Payer Health Care

- by David Swanson – 2010-03-08


The Obama Killing Machine in Afghanistan

The "under-reporting" of civilians killed by foreign forces

- by Prof. Marc W. Herold – 2010-03-08


100 Years Ago: Women’s Day (1910-2010)

Socialist Women Declare a Global Feminist Holiday

- by Megan Cornish – 2010-03-08

America’s unmanned aerial vehicles used to kill civilians

Transcript and audio report

- 2010-03-08

US to Engage in ‘Hit and Run’ War in Somalia

- 2010-03-08


VIDEO: George W. Bush War Criminal Under Canadian Law

The Trial of Mohawk Activist, Splitting the Sky

- by Prof. Anthony J. Hall – 2010-03-08


Pentagon Accuses Pacifists of Undermining the Quest for World Peace

- by Hamid Golpira – 2010-03-08


Making Nuclear Warheads at the Los Alamos National Laboratory

- by Suzy T. Kane – 2010-03-08


Strained US – China Relations: China’s Crucial Role as America’s Creditor

- by Prof. James Petras – 2010-03-08


Obama’s National Cybersecurity Initiative: Privacy and Civil liberties are Damned

Puts NSA in the Driver’s Seat

- by Tom Burghardt – 2010-03-08

March 6- 7 Conference, Philadelphia : "Treason in America: 911, the Wars & Our Broken Constitution"

Valley Forge Convention Center

- 2010-03-07


Americans Tortured in Iraq

Those Who Blow Whistle on Contractor Fraud in Iraq Face Penalties

- by Deborah Hastings – 2010-03-07

Neo-Nazi Tendencies in the Baltic States: Latvian Ruling Party to Appeal Against Ban on Waffen SS March

- 2010-03-07

US-Colombia Military Accord Challenged in Bogota Court

- 2010-03-07

Two More British Soldiers Killed in Afghanistan: Ministry

- 2010-03-07

Ahmadinejad: "The September 11 attack on the US and collapse of twin towers were parts of complicated intelligence move"

- 2010-03-07

Regulators Close Banks in Four States

- 2010-03-07

Civil Rights in America: Senate Debates Indefinite Detentions

- by William Fisher – 2010-03-07


Alleged torture by US forces of two Americans in Iraq: Judge won’t Dismiss Suit Naming Rumsfeld

- 2010-03-07


Does the Financial System need New Guard Rails?

- by Mike Whitney – 2010-03-07


Truth and Consequences in the Gaza Invasion

"This Time We Went Too Far"

- by Norman Finkelstein – 2010-03-07


Iran’s Nuclear Program: Tehran’s Reply to the IAEA on the "Implementation of Safeguards in Iran"

- by Permanent Mission of Iran to the IAEA – 2010-03-06

GlobalResearch.ca – Centre for Research on Globalization

Feds weigh expansion of Internet monitoring

Friday, March 5th, 2010

image

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, who said that Einstein 3 could only be discussed in a classified setting, speaks at the RSA conference on Wednesday.

(Credit: James Martin/CNET)

SAN FRANCISCO–Homeland Security and the National Security Agency may be taking a closer look at Internet communications in the future.

The Department of Homeland Security’s top cybersecurity official told CNET on Wednesday that the department may eventually extend its Einstein technology, which is designed to detect and prevent electronic attacks, to networks operated by the private sector. The technology was created for federal networks.

Greg Schaffer, assistant secretary for cybersecurity and communications, said in an interview that the department is evaluating whether Einstein "makes sense for expansion to critical infrastructure spaces" over time.

Not much is known about how Einstein works, and the House Intelligence Committee once charged that descriptions were overly "vague" because of "excessive classification." The White House did confirm this week that the latest version, called Einstein 3, involves attempting to thwart in-progress cyberattacks by sharing information with the National Security Agency.

Greater federal involvement in privately operated networks may spark privacy or surveillance concerns, not least because of the NSA’s central involvement in the Bush administration’s warrantless wiretapping scandal. Earlier reports have said that Einstein 3 has the ability to read the content of emails and other messages, and that AT&T has been asked to test the system. (The Obama administration says the "contents" of communications are not shared with the NSA.)

"I don’t think you have to be Big Brother in order to provide a level of protection either for federal government systems or otherwise," Schaffer said. "As a practical matter, you’re looking at data that’s relevant to malicious activity, and that’s the data that you’re focused on. It’s not necessary to go into a space where someone will say you’re acting like Big Brother. It can be done without crossing over into a space that’s problematic from a privacy perspective."

If Einstein 3 does perform as well as Homeland Security hopes, it could help less-prepared companies fend off cyberattacks, including worms sent through e-mail, phishing attempts, and even denial of service attacks.

On the other hand, civil libertarians are sure to raise questions about privacy, access, and how Einstein could be used in the future. If it can perform deep packet inspection to prevent botnets from accessing certain Web pages, for instance, could it also be used to prevent a human from accessing illegal pornography, copyright-infringing music, or offshore gambling sites?

"It’s one thing for the government to monitor its own systems for malicious code and intrusions," said Greg Nojeim, senior counsel at the Center for Democracy and Technology. "It’s quite another for the government to monitor private networks for those intrusions. We’d be concerned about any notion that a governmental monitoring system like Einstein would be extended to private networks."

AT&T did not respond to a request for comment on Wednesday.

Cooperation, or a loss of control?
At the RSA Conference here on Wednesday, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano stressed the need for more cooperation between the government and the private sector on cybersecurity, saying that "we need to have a system that works together."

During a House appropriations hearing on February 26, Napolitano refused to discuss Einstein 3 unless the hearing were closed to the public. "I don’t want to comment publicly on Einstein 3, per se, here in an unclassified setting," she said. "What I would suggest, perhaps, is a classified briefing for members of the subcommittee who are interested."

Some privacy concerns about Einstein have popped up before. An American Bar Association panel said this about Einstein 3 in a September 2009 report: "Because government communications are commingled with the private communications of non-governmental actors who use the same system, great caution will be necessary to insure that privacy and civil liberties concerns are adequately considered."

Jacob Appelbaum, a security researcher and programmer for the Tor anonymity project, said that expanding Einstein 3 to the private sector would amount to a partial outsourcing of security. "It’s clearly a win for people without the security know-how to protect their own networks," Appelbaum said. "It’s also a clear loss of control. And anyone with access to that monitoring system, legitimate or otherwise, would be able to monitor amazing amounts of traffic."

Einstein grew out of a still-classified executive order, called National Security Presidential Directive 54, that President Bush signed in 2008.

While little information is available, former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff once likened it to a new "Manhattan Project," and the Washington Post reported that the accompanying cybersecurity initiative represented the "single largest request for funds" in last year’s classified intelligence budget. The Electronic Privacy Information Center has filed a lawsuit (PDF) to obtain the text of the order.

Homeland Security has published (PDF) a privacy impact assessment for a less capable system called Einstein 2–which aimed to do intrusion detection and not prevention–but has not done so for Einstein 3.

The department did, however, prepare a general set of guidelines (PDF) for privacy and civil liberties in June 2009. In addition, the Bush Justice Department wrote a memo (PDF) saying Einstein 2 "complies with" the U.S. Constitution and federal wiretap laws.

That justification for Einstein 2 "turned on the consent of employees in the government that are being communicated with, and on the notion that a person who communicates with the government can’t then complain that the government read the communication," said CDT’s Nojeim. "How does that legal justification work should Einstein be extended to the private sector?"

Declan McCullagh is a contributor to CNET News and a correspondent for CBSNews.com who has covered the intersection of politics and technology for over a decade. Declan writes a regular feature called Taking Liberties, focused on individual and economic rights; you can bookmark his CBS News Taking Liberties site, or subscribe to the RSS feed. You can e-mail Declan at declan@cbsnews.com.

 

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-10463665-38.html

Emergency shipment of condoms headed to Olympic athletes

Friday, February 26th, 2010

John Schmuel
National Post
Fri, 26 Feb 2010 13:05 EST

Rowdy curling crowds; spontaneous street parties; public drunkeness. You don’t have to look far for evidence that the crowds at Winter Games in Vancouver know how to have a good time.
And, as if anymore proof is needed that a wild Olympic atmosphere permeates B.C.’s largest city, now there’s an apparent condom shortage.
That’s right. As you read this, an emergency shipment of condoms is desperately making its way across Canada to the West Coast city.
Health officials in Vancouver have already provided 100,000 free condoms to the roughly 7,000 ahtletes and officials at the Games. That’s about 14 condoms per person. But as of Wednesday, those supplies started running dangerously low.
So naturally, the Canadian Foundation for AIDS research decided to step and make sure there were no hitches in Olympic action.
"When we heard about the condom shortage in Vancouver, we felt it important to respond immediately," said Kerry Whiteside, CANFAR’s Executive Director. The organization assembled three large boxes of about 8,500 condoms, much to the relief of libidos at the Olympic Village. They’re expected to arrive on Thursday.
Free condoms first started to be distributed at the Olympics in Barcelona at the 1992 Games. This appears to be the first time that a shortage has struck the Games.

 

http://www.sott.net/articles/show/203664-Emergency-shipment-of-condoms-headed-to-Olympic-athletes

Venezuela’s Revolution Faces Crucial Battles

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

by Federico Fuentes

image

Global Research, February 24, 2010

Green Left Weekly – 2010-02-22

Decisive battles between the forces of revolution and counter-revolution loom on the horizon in Venezuela.

The campaign for the September 26 National Assembly elections will be a crucial battle between the supporters of socialist President Hugo Chavez and the U.S.-backed right-wing opposition. But these battles, part of the class struggle between the poor majority and the capitalist elite, will be fought more in the streets than at the ballot box.

So far this year, there has been an escalation of fascist demonstrations by violent opposition student groups; the continued selective assassination of union and peasant leaders by right-wing paramilitaries; and an intensified private media campaign presenting a picture of a debilitated government in crisis – and on its way out.

Chavez warned on January 29: “If they initiate an extremely violent offensive, that obliges us to take firm action – something I do not recommend they do – our response will wipe them out.” The comment came the day after two students were killed and 21 police suffered bullet wounds in confrontations that rocked the city of Merida.

Chavez challenged the opposition to follow the constitutional road and a recall referendum on his presidential mandate if they truly believe people no longer support him. Under the democratic constitution adopted in 1999, a recall referendum can be called on any elected official if 20% of the electorate sign a petition calling for one. He said if the capitalists continued down the road of confrontation, he would “accelerate the revolution,” which has declared “21st century socialism” as its goal.

Empire on the Offensive

The stepped-up campaign of destabilisation is part of the regional offensive launched by the opposition’s masters in Washington. Last year, the U.S. installed new military bases in Colombia and Panama, reactivated the U.S. Navy Fourth Fleet to patrol Latin American waters, and helped organize a military coup that toppled the left-wing Manuel Zelaya government in Honduras.

This year, the U.S. has occupied Haiti with 15,000 soldiers after the January 12 earthquake and U.S. warplanes have been caught violating Venezuela’s airspace.

A February 2 report from U.S. National Director of Intelligence, Admiral Dennis Blair, labelled Venezuela the “leading anti-U.S. regional force” – placing the Chavez government in Washington’s crosshairs.

A U.S. military invasion cannot be ruled out, but the main aim of the U.S. military build-up and provocations is to apply pressure on those sections of Venezuela’s Armed Forces, and others in the pro-Chavez camp, that would prefer to put the brakes on the revolutionary process to avoid a confrontation. This is occurring hand-in-hand with a campaign of media lies, combining claims that Chavez’s popularity is rapidly declining with rumours of dissent in the military and government. The U.S. and Venezuelan elite hope to isolate and ultimately, remove Chavez.

The campaign is similar to the one unleashed in 2007 to defeat Chavez’s proposed constitutional reforms, which would have created a legal framework for greater attacks on capital to the benefit of the poor majority but were narrowly defeated in a referendum.

The opposition hopes to fracture Chavez’s support base – the poor majority and the armed forces – and win a majority in the National Assembly (with which it is likely to move to impeach Chavez). At the very least, the opposition is seeking to stop pro-revolution forces from winning a two-thirds majority in the assembly, which would restrict the ease with which the Chavistas could pass legislation. The current assembly has a large pro-Chavez majority as a result of the opposition boycotting the 2005 poll.

Revolution Advances

The global economic crisis is hitting Venezuela harder than the government initially hoped. Problems in the electricity sector, among others, are also causing strain. The government’s campaign to raise awareness about the effects of climate change and wasteful usage has minimised the impact of the opposition and private media campaign to blame the government for the problems in the electricity and water sectors.

Far from fulfilling right-wing predictions that falling oil prices would result in a fall of the government’s fortunes, Chavez has continued his push to redistribute wealth to the poor – and increased moves against capital and corruption. This is occurring alongside important street mobilisations supporting the government (ignored by the international media, which gave prominent coverage to small opposition student riots).

There are new steps to increase the transfer of power to the people, such as incorporating the grassroots communal councils further into governing structures.

In November, Chavez announced interventions into eight banks found to be involved in corrupt dealings. A majority were nationalised and merged with a state bank to form the Bicentenary Bank. Together with the Bank of Venezuela, nationalised in 2007, the state now controls 25% of the banking sector – the largest single bloc. Nearly 30 bankers were charged and face trial over the corruption allegations. Significantly, a number of these had been closely aligned with the government. One of them, Ricardo Fernandez Barrueco, was a relatively unknown entrepreneur in the food sector who rose up the ranks of the business elite to own four banks and 29 Venezuelan companies.

Much of this meteoric rise was due to his ties with a section of the Chavez government, which provided him with generous contracts to supply government-subsidised Mercal food stores with produce and transportation. This earned Fernandez the nickname the “Czar of Mercal.”

The arrest of another banker over corruption allegations, Arne Chacon, led to the resignation of his brother Jessie Chacon as Chavez’s science minister.

State institutions, militants of the Chavez-led United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), and the National Guard have also moved to tackle price speculation following the January 8 decision to devalue the local currency, the bolivar. More than 1000 shops were temporarily shutdown for price speculation in the first week after the announcement.

On February 13, Chavez announced that the government had come to an agreement with French company Casino to buy out 80% of its shares in the CADA supermarket chain, which has 35 outlets across the country. Together with the recently nationalised Exito supermarket chain and the mass importation of various essential goods, the government is moving to take up a much larger share of the retail and distribution sector.

The bolivar devaluation means imported goods have become more expensive, lowering workers’ purchasing power. To compensate, the government decreed in January a 25% increase in the minimum wage (10% to be implemented in March and 15% in September). Government sources told Green Left Weekly it is also studying a further wage increase and steps toward establishing a state monopoly over foreign trade.

Grassroots Organizing

Despite the violent protests and slander campaign, a January poll by the Venezuelan Institute of Data Analysis (IVAD – generally accepted as one of Venezuela’s least biased polling companies) found more than 58% of Venezuelans continue to approve of Chavez’s presidency. The same poll also found 41.5% believed the opposition should have a National Assembly majority, compared to 49.5% who didn’t.

Some 32.6% said they would vote for pro-revolution candidates, 20.8% for the opposition and an important 33.1% for “independents.”

That 33.1% will undoubtedly shrink by September. The question is whether this section will abstain (as in the 2007 constitutional referendum) or the revolutionary forces can organize themselves to win them over and deal a decisive blow to the right.

Three massive pro-revolution demonstrations have been held already this year, dwarfing the small, but violent, opposition protests.

A new grouping of revolutionary youth organzations, the Bicentenary National Youth Front, has also been created to organize the pro-revolution majority of youth and students. The injection of organized youth into the revolution is vital for its future. This is needed, as Chavez noted in his February 12 speech to a mass demonstration of students in Caracas, to tackle the serious problems of reformism and bureaucratism that hamper the revolution.

Chavez has argued against those sectors of the revolutionary camp that insist it is possible to advance by strengthening the private sector and wooing capitalists. Chavez has repeatedly said the “national bourgeoisie” has no interest in advancing the process of change. Chavez has emphasised the “class struggle” is at the heart of this process.

He said it was vital to combat the inefficiency and bureaucracy of the state structures inherited from previous governments that hold back and sabotage the process. “We have to finish off demolishing the old structures of the bourgeois state and create the new structures of the proletarian state.” To help achieve this, the government has encouraged the creation of 184 communes across Venezuela. Communes are made up of a number of communal councils and other social organizations, bodies directly run and controlled by local communities. Chavez has referred to the communes as the “building blocks” of the new state, in which power is intended to be progressively transferred to the organized people.

The recent creation of peasant militias, organized for self-defence by poor farmers against large landowner violence, is also important.

However, the biggest challenge is the continued construction of the PSUV, a mass party with millions of still largely passive members, as a revolutionary instrument of the masses. In its extraordinary congress, which began in November and continues meeting on weekends until April, debates are occurring among the 772 elected delegates. Differences have arisen between those who support a more moderate reformist approach and those arguing for a revolutionary path.

An important debate is over whether to back Chavez’s call for a new international organization to unite revolutionary forces globally to strengthen the fight for “socialism of the 21st century.”

The debates also included whether party members will elect National Assembly candidates, or whether this important decision would be left in the hands of a select committee (as more conservative forces preferred).

After the decision to hold primary elections for candidates was announced, Chavez said on February 11: “I have confidence in the people, I have confidence in the grassroots, they will not defraud us.” •

Federico Fuentes is a member of the Green Left Weekly Caracas bureau. This article first published at Green Left Weekly website.

Global Research Articles by Federico Fuentes

 

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=17794

35 visitors online now
33 guests, 2 members
Max visitors today: 70 at 08:04 pm GMT+5
This month: 71 at 03-10-2010 09:32 pm GMT+5
This year: 101 at 02-07-2010 04:05 pm GMT+5
All time: 101 at 02-07-2010 04:05 pm GMT+5